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viernes, 2 de febrero de 2018

Two years after the assassination of the woman who dreamed of re-founding Honduras

(HERE IN SPANISH)Today marks 23 months since the assassination of
indigenous leader Berta Cáceres and we are about to reach the second
anniversary of her transition. We remember this sister on these days, with many
people eager to know how far the case has progressed over these two years and
what has changed in Honduras with the revelation of manifold human rights
violations by extractive corporations who profit off of energy production.

As of now, COPINH continues to struggle for true
justice and to push, as a first step, to break the media silence around her
case and confront the irregularities that permeate the process.

May of this year will bring the expiration of the
preventative detention* for the eight people detained in 2016, including the
direct perpetrators of the crime as well as intermediaries such as DESA
employee Sergio Rodríguez and armed forces major Mariano Díaz who coordinated
the assassination and served as an instructor for the military police.

At this point the Honduran Attorney General and
judicial authorities are flailing around desperately to try to move through and
put a close to the case by sentencing only those who they have detained. The
final arguments are expected in the case halfway through this year.
Notwithstanding, the organization, the Honduran people and the international
community remain unsatisfied in the face of a lack of action to capture the
masterminds who are linked to the powerful and untouchable Honduran oligarchy.

It is worth mentioning that today is the swearing-in
hearing for the specialists proposed by the Attorney General to analyze the
telephone recordings and financial information in the national sentencing
tribunal, which will decide the case.

Regarding the second point about what has changed in
Honduras since her death, very little can be said. The concession remains for the
hydroelectric damn ferociously defended not only by private enterprise but also
by the renewable energy producers who continue to sew hate against the
organizations that challenge the installation of numerous deadly projects,
ruining their lucrative business.

The government wants to secure the investments of
national and international corporations in this business by approving a
deceitful law supposedly about “prior, free and informed consent for indigenous
peoples” but has been unable to take the final step after strong questioning at
a national and international level.

The power structures that protect the deadly project
against which Berta Cáceres fought have strengthened themselves with electoral
fraud, carried out to ensure continuation of the status quo and protection of
private economic interests.

What Berta Cáceres contributed to today’s Honduras is
the national uprising that continues without giving up on the same vision that
would be on at the front of Berta Cáceres’s mind: the re-foundation of Honduras
that no president will be able to carry out, that can only be carried out by
the people, the same people who didn’t give up in the streets even as they
confronted the violence of the military and their killer weapons, which is the
only path to profound change for Honduras.

In the meantime COPINH is convening the “25 years of
Life and Justice Gathering” for this 22nd-24th of March
to deepen work around the case of comrades Berta and Gustavo and talk about the
struggle to this point and what the future holds for Berta’s vision in a
country that needs it now more than ever.

*The preventative detention can be extended just once
for six more moths, which would expire in November of this year.

Rio Blanco to Juan Dumas

JUSTICE FOR BERTA

With Honduras - In English

2015 Goldman Prize winners

Berta Cáceres South and Central America 2015 Goldman Prize Recipient

In a country with growing socioeconomic inequality and human rights violations, Berta Cáceres rallied the indigenous Lenca people of Honduras and waged a grassroots campaign that successfully pressured the world’s largest dam builder to pull out of the Agua Zarca Dam.http://www.goldmanprize.org/recipient/berta-caceres/

DOCUMENTS

How Many More? 116 Environmental Defenders Were Murdered Last Year, Mostly in Latin America

New report shows killings of environmental activists are increasing, with indigenous communities hardest hit. We shine a spotlight on Honduras - the most dangerous country to be an environmental defender
https://www.globalwitness.org/campaigns/environmental-activists/how-many-more/